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V.p. 1905-1910. 1. Leone, Enriko [Enrico Leone]. Sindikalizm. [Moscow: Pechatnoe Delo, 1907.] viii,174pp. First Russian edition, published the same year as the first Italian edition, translated by G. Kirdetsoca. Leone, a journalist and economist, was one of the top Italian national syndicalists. His current work outlines the history and theories... More

Cambridge: University Radical Union, 1971. First Edition. Two issues in original staple-bound printed wrappers. Quartos; 77+64pp. Uneven fading to wrapper edges, else fine. Organ of the University Radical Union, an unaffiliated "radical socialist" collective of students and faculty at Harvard University. Contributors to these first two issues include Cynthia Fredrick... More

New York: Post War World Council, 1943. First Edition. On the opportunities for Negro advancement in the post-war world. The Post War World Council (PWWC) was an outgrowth of the Keep America Out Of War Congress, which had been dissolved following Pearl Harbor; the PWWC was a Socialist-affiliated group, under... More

New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1963. Contents reprinted from The International Socialist Review, October, 1963. "Text of resolution "Freedom Now: The New Stage in the Struggle for Negro Emancipation and the Tasks of the SWP," adopted by the 1963 Convention of the Socialist Party" (from copyright page). Final pages delineate the... More

Boston: Richard G. Badger, 1913. First Edition. Collection of five scholarly lectures by the Scots-American classicist and historian of ideas, long-time head of the Department of Philosophy at The University of Michigan. Of the five works included, only the title essay – on the classical origins of modern Anarchist thought... More

Los Angeles: Haymarket, 1976. Stapled self-wraps; [12pp]. Fine. House organ of the The Haymarket, a socialist community co-operative bookstore and coffee house located on Parkview Street in Los Angeles. Publication details uncertain, though this issue announces an expansion "to include fiction, poetry, criticism, and anything else of interest." Cover illustration... More

New York: The Socialist Party, ca. 1932. Upper cover: "All socially healthful incentives and industrial opportunities now existing to be retained, and many new and better ones established. False and ignorant 'dead-level' charge authoritatively refuted. Individual initiative encouraged and personal liberty safeguarded." Incidentally, this subtitle is longer than the pamphlet... More

London: Geoffrey Chapman, 1969. First Edition. Octavo. Cloth boards; dustjacket; 232pp. Tight, unmarked, Near Fine copy in lightly spine-sunned but otherwise Near Fine dustwrapper. A tight, attractive copy. Adulatory biography written by a Gill friend and disciple; focuses on Gill's aesthetic and political tendencies, omitting most of the unsavory aspects... More

Croton-on-Hudson: 1941. Brief 1-pp TNS on Eastman's personal Croton-On-Hudson notepaper, addressed to a "Miss Mendham", dated March 30, 1938. Old folds; holograph additions in Eastman's hand; Very Good. "I shall be delighted to have you use some of my poems in your Verse Speaking Festival...perhaps the poem called "Battle Fields"... More

Detroit: M.M. Bailey Publishers, 1912. "Second Thousand" A substantial and apparently unrecorded work of radical reform fiction. The author compares the latter stages of Capitalism to the brute struggle of savages; Socialism will initiate the "World's Spirit of Truth." This is presumably the second printing of Volume One, but neither... More

Chicago: The Workers' Art Press, 1913. Socialist poems in praise of the workers' struggle. This is the first trade edition, following a limited edition in 1910. 12mo. Green cloth (hardcover); 192pp. Corners and spine ends touched, else close to fine with gilt bright on boards and no internal soiling or wear.More

Paris: Alexandre-Pierre, 1848. First Edition. Second letter of a series of three by Barrault, composed shortly after the Revolution of 1848, and addressed to leading political and public figures, including Alphonse de Lamartine and David Rothschild. Barrault, a staunch Saint-Simonian socialist and editor of the Tocsan des Travailleurs (The Workers'... More

New York: League For Industrial Democracy, 1935. Staple-bound pamphlet; biblio.; 46pp. Pencil date to lightly sunned and foxed cover, small crease to top right corner of cover and pages, pencil marks to rear endpaper, else very good.More

New York: Federal Book Company, 1902. First Edition. Ahouse: "The medieval romance, The Winning of Sarenne, comes out of Sinclair's 'potboiler' experience, which overlapped with his serious writing career by several years." This binding not described by Ahouse, who calls for either light blue or red cloth (no priority given)... More

New York: New York Labor News Company, n.d. [1920?]. First Thus. 12mo 17cm.); original tan decorative staplebound wrappers; 31pp. Previous vertical fold, extremities a bit darkened, else About Very Good. Date based on advertisement on rear wrapper for Daniel De Leon's What Means This Strike?More

Stuttgart: Verlag von J.H.W. Dietz, 1890. First Edition. German-language biography of the French utopian socialist and inventor of the Phalanstère, a building design for an intentional community. August Bebel was co-founder of the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany (1869) and acted as chairman of the Social Democratic Party of..... More

New York: Devin-Adair Company, 1937. First Edition. Biography of the Roman Catholic Priest and supporter of Henry George and the Single Tax movement. McGlynn would go so far as to found the Anti-Poverty Society for which he would be excommunicated between 1887 and 1892. EGBERT II, p. 319. Octavo (21cm.);... More

New York: Joseph F. Wagner, [1912]. First Edition. Slim octavo (20.5cm.); original tan printed wrappers; [4],75pp. Extremities toned and lightly rubbed, else Very Good or better. Pro-Christian Socialist pamphlet, apparently Bellord's only published work according to holdings in OCLC.More